-As of Bacula version 1.39.20 or greater, the installer is capable
-of installing not just the Client program, but also the Director
-and the Storage daemon and all the other programs that were
-previously available only on Unix systems. These additional
-programs, notably the Director and Storage daemon, have been partially
-tested, are reported to have some bugs, and still need to be documented.
-They are not yet supported, and we cannot currently accept or fix
-bug reports on them. Consequently, please test them carefully before putting
-them into a critical production environment.
-
-The Windows version of the Bacula File daemon has been tested on Win98, WinMe,
-WinNT, WinXP, Win2000, and Windows 2003 systems. We have coded to support
-Win95, but no longer have a system for testing. The Windows version of
-Bacula is a native Win32 port, but there are very few source code changes
-to the Unix code, which means that the Windows version is for the most part
-running code that has long proved stable on Unix systems. When running, it
-is perfectly integrated with Windows and displays its icon in the system
-icon tray, and provides a system tray menu to obtain additional information
-on how Bacula is running (status and events dialog boxes). If so desired,
-it can also be stopped by using the system tray menu, though this should
-normally never be necessary.
+The Windows version of the Bacula File daemon has been tested on WinXP,
+Win2000, Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, Vista, Windows 7, and
+Windows 2012 systems. The Windows version of Bacula is a native Windows
+port, but there are very few source code changes to the Unix code, which
+means that the Windows version is for the most part running code that has
+long proved stable on Unix systems. When running, it is perfectly
+integrated with Windows and displays its icon in the system icon tray, and
+provides a system tray menu to obtain additional information on how Bacula
+is running (status and events dialog boxes). If so desired, it can also be
+stopped by using the system tray menu, though this should normally never be
+necessary.